Advancing Medical Imaging Research Through Standardization: The Path to Rapid Development, Rigorous Validation, and Robust Reproducibility.

Invest Radiol

From the Department of Biomedical Systems Informatics, Yonsei University, Seoul, South Korea (K.J., S.C.Y.); Institution for Innovation in Digital Healthcare, Yonsei University, Seoul, South Korea (K.J., S.C.Y.); Biomedical Informatics and Data Science, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD (W.Y.P., P.N.); Department of Radiology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA (C.E.K.); and Department of Radiology, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul National University Hospital, Seoul, South Korea (S.H.Y.).

Published: January 2025

AI Article Synopsis

  • AI has advanced significantly in radiology but faces challenges like the need for high-quality, standardized data for development and validation.* -
  • The OMOP Common Data Model promotes international collaboration by ensuring data interoperability and privacy, while the new Medical Imaging Common Data Model focuses on integrating medical imaging data with clinical information.* -
  • Standardizing and integrating medical imaging data on a global scale will enhance AI research, enable federated learning, support diverse patient inclusion, and improve the reliability of AI systems in clinical settings.*

Article Abstract

Artificial intelligence (AI) has made significant advances in radiology. Nonetheless, challenges in AI development, validation, and reproducibility persist, primarily due to the lack of high-quality, large-scale, standardized data across the world. Addressing these challenges requires comprehensive standardization of medical imaging data and seamless integration with structured medical data.Developed by the Observational Health Data Sciences and Informatics community, the OMOP Common Data Model enables large-scale international collaborations with structured medical data. It ensures syntactic and semantic interoperability, while supporting the privacy-protected distribution of research across borders. The recently proposed Medical Imaging Common Data Model is designed to encompass all DICOM-formatted medical imaging data and integrate imaging-derived features with clinical data, ensuring their provenance.The harmonization of medical imaging data and its seamless integration with structured clinical data at a global scale will pave the way for advanced AI research in radiology. This standardization will enable federated learning, ensuring privacy-preserving collaboration across institutions and promoting equitable AI through the inclusion of diverse patient populations. Moreover, it will facilitate the development of foundation models trained on large-scale, multimodal datasets, serving as powerful starting points for specialized AI applications. Objective and transparent algorithm validation on a standardized data infrastructure will enhance reproducibility and interoperability of AI systems, driving innovation and reliability in clinical applications.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/RLI.0000000000001106DOI Listing

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